On Sun, Mar 20, 2005 at 12:09:29AM -1000, Tom Gordon wrote: > I haven't noticed this happen to anything k12ltsp-related. > Although, I have seen it happen for the kernel (new kernel > broken) but that is why new kernels aren't set to boot by > default. At the worst, for example, if the /etc/samba/smb.conf > format changed heavily (which it hasen't in forever), he'd only > have to reconfig his shares. > > Don't forget that all these upstream projects, while > maybe not concerned with any particular OS, do try to be > backwards-compatible. If you consider the OS expendable, > recovery is simpler. Just worry about /home and any other place > you hide user data (something you always check for whenever you > add a role to the server - ie database, web, mail, etc.).
The points you list are a valid for both automatic and manual updates. I will submit that routine updates should not cause any issues. My main point against blind automatic updates is the timing of it. With automatic updates, the administrator will not be around if the updates fail. Imagine the system breaking when the administrator is out sick or on vacation. When manual updates are performed, it gives the administrator an immediate chance to check and see if anything went wrong. -Vince
